Pubdate: Sat, 01 Dec 2001 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2001 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Author: Linda Bridgeman Smith Note: Smith is a member of the San Diego Methamphetamine Strike Force-Vista Partners Project Cited: San Diego Methamphetamine Strike Force http://www.no2meth.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) MAKE NO MISTAKE, IT CAN HAPPEN CLOSE TO YOUR HOME The day before Thanksgiving, the Drug Enforcement Administration arrested one of my neighbors for possession and sale of methamphetamine. Also removed from the premises with all of the other assorted evidence was a very young, barefoot and scared child who was taken to the Polinsky Center. Just another drug arrest to be added to the sum that happens every day, in every jurisdiction, throughout San Diego County and across the nation. The house in question is diagonal from my home, literally a stone's throw from my driveway. I live in an older area of both rented and owner-occupied homes, just outside the El Cajon city limits. Nothing fancy here, just modest homes of working class and retired people. The relationship among the neighbors is very casual; an off-hand wave as you get into the car to leave for work, or the exchange of a few quick pleasantries over the fence before getting on with the business of the day. Perhaps if we had taken the time to speak sooner to one another about the strange activity we all observed going on and called the Meth Hotline, the illicit activity and the danger it presented could have been curtailed earlier. I guess to some, a drug arrest is not a surprising event. Other people's drug use/abuse is something that many people tolerate and even accept. I was shocked -- which is saying a great deal, since I have worked for the San Diego County Methamphetamine Strike Force for the last two years. A large part of my job has been to go out and talk to people about this very issue. I sure didn't expect to find it so close to my own home. I had observed firsthand many of the behaviors I have talked to countless community groups about; excessive automobile traffic that stayed only a few minutes, odd hours and the furtive actions of the people living there. Yet I did not make the call that ultimately resulted in Wednesday's arrest. Why? Because I thought I was being overly suspicious and seeing meth labs and drug dealers everywhere. I did not trust that little, inner voice that kept whispering to me that there was something amiss here. Many people are of the opinion that someone else's drug use should be no one's concern but their own. However, just like we have come to realize that there is an effect on non-smokers by secondhand smoke, there is also a secondhand effect to someone else's drug use. Meth use turns formerly loving and caring parents, kids, neighbors and friends into suspicious, paranoid, and ultimately, very unhappy and potentially dangerous people. Parents or caregivers engaged in meth manufacture expose children and others to chemical hazards that legally require the clean up crew to wear protective clothing, not to mention the risk of explosion or fire. Someone else's decision to become engaged in illegal activity exposes countless people unwittingly to dangerous situations and desperate people. The cost to the taxpayer is enormous -- in San Diego County alone, it is estimated that the cost of alcohol and drug abuse is $1.8 billion annually. Also affected but much harder to quantify, is the personal sense of well-being and security that is felt within the confines of your own home. That personal sense of safety should exist whether you rent or own -- it is still your home, your sanctuary. In a post Sept. 11 world, it becomes even more important that we pay attention to what is happening around us. Terrorists from foreign countries may try to inflict harm intentionally. Drug dealers and manufacturers also inflict harm on others. If you don't believe this to be true, I remind you again, of the toddler removed from a drug endangered environment on the day before Thanksgiving. That innocent child is a victim of a crime and deserves to be protected from harm at any cost. There are some things that you can do to protect yourself and your family. Contact your local law enforcement agency crime prevention unit and ask about Neighborhood Watch or other anti-crime environment programs. Call 1-877-No-2-METH or on the Internet at www.No2METH.org and report suspicious drug related activity. The Meth Hotline and Web site are confidential ways of reporting drug activity that protects your identity. You can also obtain a referral to a drug treatment program if one is needed. Get to know your neighbors and watch out for each other's homes and property. This simple act can deter numerous problems. We need to let the bad guys know that we, as a neighborhood and community, will no longer tolerate illegal drug activity. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake